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Fundamental Friday

December 19, 2025

Topic

The Philosophy of Saving & Using Infinite Banking for Family Wealth

Key Takeaways

1. Savings Build Confidence and Control

  • The “Save and Walk Tall” philosophy connects saving to self-confidence, independence, and principled decision-making.

  • Savings reduce economic pressure, allowing calm, candid, and values-based choices.

2. Insure Children Early to Lock in Insurability

  • Secures a child’s health rating before future medical issues arise.

  • Example: Jim’s grandson became uninsurable at age 24.

  • Convertible term insurance is a low-cost way to lock in insurability.

3. Children’s Policies Act as Financial “Training Wheels”

  • A sample $150/month policy for a 12-year-old teaches saving discipline.

  • Can be designed to be paid up in ~7 years.

  • Creates a small, growing asset for future needs (college, first car).

4. Fund Your Own Policy First (“Oxygen Mask Rule”)

  • Parents’ financial stability is the foundation of family wealth.

  • Prevents parents from becoming a financial burden on their children.

Topics Covered

I. The Philosophy of Saving

Budgeting vs. Saving

  • Budgeting: Allocating money.

  • Saving: Requires a clear why.

  • Without purpose, spending expands to exhaust available funds, creating a reactive, scarcity-driven mindset.

Scarcity vs. Abundance Mindsets

  • Scarcity:

    • Defensive and contracting

    • Focused on survival

  • Abundance:

    • Offensive and expansive

    • Focused on leveraging resources and creating opportunities

The “Save and Walk Tall” Philosophy

  • Savings directly build confidence and control over one’s life.

  • Without savings, people are always “running”:

    • Forced to take the first job offer

    • Dependent on others in emergencies

  • Savings provide the freedom to:

    • Calmly evaluate opportunities

    • Leave a job on principle (often increasing perceived value)

    • Speak honestly and make candid judgments

  • The ability to save is a habit, not a function of income size.

II. Using Infinite Banking for Family Wealth

Insuring Children

Why It Matters

  • Locks in insurability and health rating while young and healthy.

Underwriting Rules

  • Parent must have a policy with a death benefit greater than the child’s.

  • All children must be insured (or a stated plan to do so).

Age-Based Ratings

  • Under 20:

    • Standard rating

    • Higher insurance costs

    • Slower cash value growth

  • Age 20+:

    • Eligible for preferred ratings

    • Lower costs

    • Faster cash value growth

Policy Design & Funding

  • Convertible Term Insurance

    • Low-cost method to lock in insurability

    • Convertible to whole life later with no new medical underwriting

    • Minimum age: 20

  • Whole Life for Children

    • Example: $150/month policy for a 12-year-old

    • Cash value exceeds total outlay in ~7 years

  • PUA Catch-Up Feature (Penn Mutual)

    • Allows business owners to make up missed Paid-Up Additions from the prior year

    • Useful for capturing unexpected profits

  • Funding Strategy

    • Policies can be designed to be paid up in ~7 years

    • Creates a small, growing asset for future milestones

Teaching Financial Discipline

  • “Vitamin K & D”

    • Knowledge and Discipline

  • Involve Children

    • Have them contribute to premiums (e.g., from chores)

    • Builds ownership and responsibility

  • Use Policy Loans as Teaching Tools

    • Demonstrate borrowing and repayment

    • Teaches real-world banking principles

  • Transfer Ownership

    • Once mature and educated, the policy can be transferred to the child

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